The American Legion Monthly [Volume 4, No. 2 (February 1928)]

The American Legion Monthly [Volume 4, No. 2 (February 1928)]

qhMERICAN EGION JOHN ERSKINE - ROBERT W. CHAMBERS HUGH WALPOLE + PERCEVAL GIBBON - HUGH WILEY "Submarine sighted—position 45 BATTLE PLANES leap into action — bined ,180,000 horse power to the propellers springing from a five-acre deck — —enough to drive the ship at 39 miles an sure of a landing place on their return, hour— enough to furnish light and power though a thousand miles from shore. for a city of half a million people. This marvel of national de- And in the familiar occupa- fense was accomplished — and tions of daily life, electricity is duplicated— when the airplane working wonders just as great carrier, U. S.S.Saratoga, and her —improving industrial produc- sister ship, U. S. S. Lexington, tion, lifting the burden of labor, The General Electric Com- were completely electrified. pany has developed pow- speeding transportation, and erful marine equipment, as In each, four General Electric well as electric apparatus multiplying the comforts of for every purpose of public turbine-generators deliver, com- advantage and personal ser- home. vice. Its products are iden- tified by the initials G-E. GENERAL ELECTRIC — ££> Electricity le In Chicago, the electrical center of the world. 2* At a great, practical school* 3. A national institution for 29 years. 4* By actual jobs on a mammoth outlay of eleo trical apparatus. 5. All practical training on actual electrical machinery, 6. No advanced education necessary. 7. Endorsed by many leading electrical concerns. YouLearn byDoing— notReading— at COYNE in 90 Day! Only by actual practical training on every kind of electric apparatus can you become a real Practical Electrician capable of commanding a real salary With such practical training as given at COYNE, you become a real Practical Electrician in 90 days. Think of it! Hundreds and hundreds of men are constantly coming to COYNE with no other equipment than their Common Sense and- their Ambition — and in 3 months' time they go out into the world ready to make a name for themselves and earn good money! Coyne trains you for life! You are given a life scholarship when you enroll at Coyne. You stay as long as you like and you are at liberty to return for additional training whenever you want. Free consultation and educational service given to Coyne graduates indefinitely. Get into Big Pay Class Practical Electricians get jobs leading to $50.00 a week and up. Scores of our graduates have gone into business, and are now making from $3,000 a year and up. Are you Ambitious? Are you determined to be somebody? Have you the pluck to start something and see it through? Then—COME! Never mind about the lack of advanced education! COME! Never mind about the lack of experience! COME! We will start you right at the beginning — put you to work under the eyes of instructors, on motors, generators, autos, batteries, radios, power plants, switchboards and hundreds of other electrical devices doing actual repair and installation jobs, and operating just exactly as you'll do later outside. Almost before you realize what is happening you will be a real practical electrician ready to take a big paying position or go into business for yourself. EarnWhileYou Learn M Free Book We help students to secure jobs to earn a good part Send For of their living expenses while studying. Our employ- ment department helps graduates to good positions. Write at once for our Big Free Book. Learn Mail Coupon Now all about what is not only the quickest way, but the only thorough way— the only right way— to become a real, practical Electrical Expert. This book not only proves Coyne Electrical School, H. C. Lewie, Pres. trained to you the marvelous opportunities ahead for the Coyne 500 S. Paulina St., Dept. *8-04Chicago, III. Electrical man, but shows you the shortest and surest way of Dear Mr Lewis: Without obligation send me your big free catalog it aeroplane and becoming one. Send the coupon and get the facts. Mail Today! —and all details of free employment service, radio, automotive electrical courses, that are included and how many bothered by any "earn while learning." I understand I will not be Electrical salesmen. SCHOOL Name COYNE Address H. C. Lewis, Pres.— Est. 1899 City States. $00 So. Paulina St., Dept. 28-04, Chicago, 111. FEBRUARY, 1928 Vol. 4, No. 2 ^MERICAN EGION Contents Cover Design: Lincoln by Howard Chandler Christy The Message Center by The Editor Think Ahead! by Robert W. Chambers The Legend of Sleepy Hollow by Washington Irving With a Critical Introduction by JOHN ERSKINE Decorations by Lowell L. Balcom An Enemy Debt by Perceval Gibbon 14 Illustrations by V. E. Pvles America—From the Inside On by Hugh Walpole First Families by Marquis James Editorial with cartoon by John Cassel Here's Luck ! third episode-. Entente Cordiale and Other Drinks by Hugh Wiley Illustrations by Herbert M. Stoops High Water by Alexander Gardiner A Personal View by Frederick Palmer Speaking of Cherries by Wallaren Bursts and Duds with cartoons by Matthew Greene Keeping Step i, y Right Guide Then and Now by The Company Clerk Telling the World by Grover F. Sexton Saving Trees and Men by Franklin Stetson Clark THE STARS IN THE FLAG New Jersey: One of the original thirteen colonies. First population, 45th in area, 3d in density. Capital. Trenton, settled by the Swedes along the Delaware River, and by (1926 U. S. est.), 134,000. Three largest cities (1926 est.), the Dutch in northwestern part who had migrated from Newark, 459,000; Jersey City, 318,000; Paterson, 143,000. Holland via New Amsterdam. In 1655, Peter Estimated wealth (1923 U. S. Census), $11,794,- Stuyvesant gained control of the entire region for 189,000. Principal sources of wealth (U. S. 1923), the Dutch. In 1664, the Dutch surrendered the silk industry output, petroleum re- $183,389,001 ; colony to the English. On June 24, 1664, the fining products, $242,304,887; chemical products, Duke of York granted it to two noble friends, $121,301,321. Natural products: In IQ20, the Berkeley and Carteret, as a proprietary province. state's 29,702 farms yielded crops valued at $87,- Divided into East and West Jersey under the jur- 484,000 in corn, wheat, oats, potatoes, rye, buck- isdiction of Pennsylvania, it was reunited into a wheat, hay, fruits, cranberries, strawberries and Mngle colony in 1702, when it became a royal garden truck. New Jersey had 145,995 men in province of England. Population 1700, 184,139; the service during the World War. State motto, 1026 (U. S. est.), 3,680,482. Percentage of urban popula- adopted 1776, Liberty and Prosperity. Origin of name: Car- tion (communities of 2,500 and over), iooo. 70.6; 1010, teret one of the proprietary owners named it for the Isle of 75.2; 1920, 78.4. Area, 8,224 sq. miles. Density of popula- Jersey, one of the British Isles, which he had administered. tion (1925), 426.3 per sq. mile. Rank among States, 10th in Nicknames. Jersey Blue, Garden State, New Spain, Mosquito. Robert F. Smith, General Manager John T. Winterich, Editor Philip Von Blon, Managing Editor The American Legion Monthly is the official publication of The American Legion and The American Legion Auxiliary and is owned exclusively The American Le_gion._ Copyright, 1928, by the Publishing Corporation^ Published_ by _ Legion _ monthly at Indianapolis, Ind. Entered as second : postage nited States 1 address as well as the new. Publication Office, Indianapolis, Ind.; Eastern Advertising Office, 331 Madison Avenue, New York City; Western Advertising Office, 410 North Michigan Avenue, Chicago. 2 The AMERICAN LEGION Monthly How "Would You Like to Spend an Hour "Witli you could sit beside this beautiful woman and hear from her S~\ TT IT"* /^\ 1T\ A r I i Ip A O IF / own lips the strange story of her marriage to her brothers (one I P (I /-\ ( ^Jl—rfJl— J f\ JL. JL^^.f\ JV. of whom she disposed of by poison which she tested on slaves) ± and of her life with Caesar and Mark Anthony; you would be delighted. Her story would be one of ambition and love. As the last of the Ptolomies she was the heiress of legalized license, cultured sensuality, refined cruelty, and century-long moral turpitude, But she had redeeming qualities; profligate and voluptuous as she was, she was an able statesman, knew many languages, had unusual literary tastes, imperious will, and a masculine boldness that made her one of the most remarkable women the world has ever produced. Of course you can't hear from her own lips her story but you can read all the facts, gossip, famous (and infamous) As tike N. Y, Now Offered in a Special says, Iby the Low Priced Edittion ¥OMAN Free on Approval YOUR CHANCE TO LEARN ABOUT WOMAN A FEW OF THE STRANGE TALES Read about the woman who was forced to drink her husband's health You will read how Emperor Theophilus chose his bride; how the from her father's skull and her revenge; how the women of Weinsberg Suliote women, facing dishonorable surrender, jumped to death. \ on carried their husbands to safety on their shoulders—and why. Learn will learn how two gentlemen threw dice to decide which was the father how Helen of Troy caused a ten years' war—and how a Princess of a child of that beauty, Ninon de I .enclos; of how her son unsuspecting drowned herself to stop further wars over her beauty. fell in love with her and, upon learning the truth, shot himself. FAMOUS LOVERS YOU MEET FAMOUS WOMEN This is your chance to read about the famous lovers, Heloise and You meet Catherine the Great, Jeanne d'Arc, Madame du Barry, Em- Abelard ; about Margarida, who unsuspecting ate her lover's heart; and press Josephine, Marie Antoinette, Nell Gwyn, Messalina, Lucrezia Borgia, how the Turkish Emperor Orkham beheaded his beautiful wife Theodora the Queen of Sheba, Jezebel, and hundreds upon hundreds of others.

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